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Cash. I only have some WW2-era sniper rifles in my village. They are only used to shoot down birds or to send signals lol.Loaded. Hmmmm. Ammo or cash? Or both?![]()
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Cash. I only have some WW2-era sniper rifles in my village. They are only used to shoot down birds or to send signals lol.Loaded. Hmmmm. Ammo or cash? Or both?![]()
2 Strobes with soft boxes at 45 degree and a foamboard on the opposite side of the head. You can use a hair light but it would be a bit trickier because it will bounce the light back against the model head, which shaded out the face. You can adjust it tho, but it will take longer, so I "cheated" with a foam board instead...Nicely done. How did you arrange the light sources?
2 Strobes with soft boxes at 45 degree and a foamboard on the opposite side of the head. You can use a hair light but it would be a bit trickier because it will bounce the light back against the model head, which shaded out the face. You can adjust it tho, but it will take longer, so I "cheated" with a foam board instead...
I am very old school in photography, I position my light in a very close position and move my light further and further away until the model eyes stop reflecting the light and show her true colour, then you move in with the light meters and get your ISO and shutter speed and then finally I adjust my F-stop to have a clear picture.


Choice of lens? I notice no 85 or 105 mm equivalent prime.
some black and white work
View attachment 11241
View attachment 11242
I use 18-55mm lens for studio. There are no need for anything bigger than 55mm IMO, I mean you are never 6 meters away from the subject anyway, why use high power lens to distort the object? Outdoor I shoot with 55-200mm.
Thanks, black and white are always good in term of lighting, this is the unedited image.Again, nice lighting.
55mm on a crop sensor gets in the 85 mm range anyway and you use good lighting and thus don’t need a fast lens. Good DoF.
Obviously you know what you are doing here. I can learn much here. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and work.




Thanks, black and white are always good in term of lighting, this is the unedited image.
View attachment 11246
As I already mentioned, I am old school, like very old school, I like to manipulate light myself, which to some may have been very hard or complicated to do, but if you know the trick, it's actually very easy (eg the walking back trick I mentioned before) Another key to low-intensity photography is to underexpose the model and then you contrast it with the lack of lighting on the other part of the model, in this case, you can see the model hand, chest and face but most of her other feature is hidden (her legs would also have shown as well but was covered with black tights, which is another trick for the contrast)
View attachment 11248
So when you start exposing the image, the light intensity multiplied exponentially on the reflected surface, but will only expose limited lighting on the surface that was hidden
View attachment 11250
See how the RGB bar moved? The low lighting bit didn't move much but the highlighted bit have expanded 3 to 4 folds. And this is the final product
View attachment 11251
again, old school.........as in REALLY old school. So no Adobe lightroom or photoshop........When you say old school you really mean it!
No Adobe Lightroom?
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